After relatively successful years, commercially speaking, and a big breakthrough in terms of production and ratings with the 2000 final, the ESC was still up for a few years of unplain sailing.
The winners of 2001 and 2002 were commercial flops, and the problem with corrupt voting figures (as countries had started to trade points in the mid-90's to avoid relegation) was still very present.
Also, the ratings suffered in the countries that got relegated. In Finland, where interest in the ESC had always been strong, the ratings were reduced to nothing after being out every second year since 1994.
So the EBU took action - all televotes started to go to a central switchboard in Cologne, so that the official scrutineers had full control over the numbers presented during the final.
And - in 2004, the ESC changed dramatically, as the semi final was introduced. Now every interested country could take part every year, and in retrospect, this move seems to have consolidated the popularity of eurovision. At least for the time being.
2001 - France
Natasha St Pier - Je n'ai que mon âme (France 2001)
Disaster comes quickly, when DR follows up the slick, elegant and modern production of 2000 with a monster contest where staging the biggest contest ever matters more than anything else.
Also, the songs lined up for the 2001 contest could, on average, be the weakest bunch since the mid-60's or so.
At least France decided to deliver again after some lean years, and sent in a great song - rather reminiscent of "Pour que tu m'aimes encore" and similar recent pop hits in French - with a Canadian star in the making.
Thanks to TF1 picking the song up (rather than any effort from participating broadcaster France3), the song became the biggest commercial success to come out of Eurovision in France since "White And Black Blues" eleven years before.
The live performance doesn't quite do the song justice, but the recorded version is top crop.
Real winner:
Dave Benton & Tanel Padar - Everybody (Estonia)
2002 - Finland
Laura - Addicted To You (Finland 2002)
After a span of unsuccessful entries, often more aiming at being liked rather than trying to communicate anything of lasting importance, Finland selected an entry that felt fresh, relevant and inspired.
2002 was a hard field to crack. The general level of songs being quite alright, but with many songs sounding very much the same, trapped in an updated disco landscape, sharing the available points between them.
Despite being hailed as one of the favourites, Laura Voutilainen crashed and burned on a pale 20th place, behind many lesser songs. This was nothing new for Finland, but the feeling that the voting had been anything but fair left a bitter taste.
Looking at the scoreboard, some countries are obviously trading points with each other, some others are obviously voting tactically to keep other favourites down. The EBU stepped in, did what had to be done and took control over the voting process.
If not, who knows what it would have taken to restore the audience's faith in the voting.
Real winner:
Marie N - I wanna
2003 - Turkey
Sertab Erener - Everyway That I Can (Turkey 2003)
After two musically lean years, Riga offered fresh winds and a more daring collection of songs again. More surprises, new musical directions. Exactly what the contest needed.
Even better then that Europe favoured a variety of different styles and the final top ten had ballads, humour, radio pop, latin pop, rock anthems, world music, punk pop... and a very Oriental winner.
For the first time ever, Eurovision decided to give thumbs up to an exotic praline and Turkish superstar Sertab Erener won the title after a nailbiting finish, where Belgium looked like the winner up until the last country cast its vote.
Of course Turkey was the right winner - a dancefloor stomper, a commercial hit and a clear departure in a new direction for the ESC.
Real winner:
Sertab - Everyway That I Can (Turkey)
2004 - Serbia & Montenegro
Željko Joksimović & Ad Hoc Orchestra - Lane moje (Serbia & Montenegro 2004)
The first Serbian eurosong for 2004 was well worth waiting for - anthemic, majestic, hypnotic. Very well sung, very well performed.
Željko has been back as composer as well as host of the entire show, but never has he left quite such an impression as he did this time.
Despite being another slightly weaker year, there are still quite a few really good classics in the running. But Lane moje blows them all away. Should have won by a mile.
Real winner:
Ruslana - Wild Dance (Ukraine)
2005 - Iceland
Selma - If I Had Your Love (Iceland 2005)
Oh, how the ESC can mess with your head. From the first time I heard Selma's comeback entry, I was sure Iceland had a good placing coming.
I thought it was modern, intriguing, haunting and very, very catchy. But what did that help? When the last envelope was opened in the semi final it read "Latvia". Not "Iceland".
Team Selma had a fall-out with the production team shortly before the semi, something that surely disturbed everyone more than a bit. The live performance isn't perfect and the choreography doesn't quite work.
But still. How a fantastic entry like this one can miss the final is beyond me.
It would take a few years before the semi final worked up enough ratings for the results to be representative rather than just a fancy lottery. Having two semis instead of just the one also helped a lot.
But I doubt that made Selma any happier.
Real winner:
Helena Paparizou - My Number One (Greece)
A very good analysis. Totally agree with you re. the Polish entries of 1994 and '95 - also 2001 right up to 2004. For '05 I'd plump for Norway - loved those Wig Wam guys and I think it could have been a huge (international) hit.
ReplyDeleteWould love to read your thoughts on where you think ESC should go - I would love it to produce a new superstar hit maker and really want the winner to be a hit each year. Thought it was going in the right direction with Lena last year (who should have won this year!).
2001 - Yes - France was the stand out and really should have won. Estonia? Denmark and Greece were in front of it and none of them are as timeless as the French song.
ReplyDelete2002 - Absolutely Finland. It was kind of a dull year. A gimmick won and came 2nd. France was a highlight and surprisingly Denmark that came last was of a higher standard than the winner - but suffered from nerves.
2003 - a favorite year. Personally, Russia was my favorite. Faster to name the songs i didn't like: Cyprus, Malta, Slovenia, and the Ukraine.
2004 - Agreeing again with 'Lane moje' Not a good ESC year.
2005 - I'm going to name Greece as my favorite as it was the only stand out song. Other big favorite is Israel. Again - short list of not liked songs - Turkey (what was that woman on) and Ukraine (this led a revolution to freedom)
No, France 2001 was one of the most sh*ttiest songs of that year and should have absolutely not won - Estonia was really the rightful winner!
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